Dissection Of The Funt
-
<p>Headed out for my first run in- well a few months i guess. Got the standard ocular migraine vision thing after the first 5 minutes but pressed through it with no headache. 3km in 16:41. Long way back but at 99.9kg not diabolical either.<br><br>
I am aiming to get a roll on with the running, build back to 5km as the weight comes off, and then see if the vision issues subside.<br><br>
At the same time I'll be doing some anaerobic work on the body weight side (burpees, chins, lunges, free squats) to see if that also brings on the vision bullshit and whether that is the better way to progress.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Current mantra is "95 by November" so I've got a few months to shed ~5kg (half a kilo per week) and keep it off over summer.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Then hit pre-season training next year (I'm coaching again because I'm a masochist) and make some of the boys vomit trying to keep up with me.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Want to be under 90kg by my 40th Birthday. I'm sick of my nice jeans and work shirts not fitting comfortably.</p> -
Burpees are an absolute fluffybunny, no two ways about it, I find that with them it is mind over matter even if your 'jump' at the end after several reps doesn't result in you even leaving the floor. <br><br>
I haven't done em for ages, doing weighted lunges and plyometric jumps and shit instead. -
<p>Fuck's sake. Been a while. Tried to exercise a few times but the migraine aura and occasional headache have been off-putting.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Decided to do something about it this week, with a free 1 week pass to a group training gym owned by a friend of the family. Turned up tonight at the appointed time, and it was a ghost town. Dang.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>So I came home and did a very short HIIT session - 30 on, 20 off, with a mixture of chinups, squats, squat jumps (vertical and horizontal), burpees, lunges, and pushups.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Worst 8 minutes of my year. Started to get the headache too so need to go see the chiro and get my neck checked out.</p> -
I often get migraine aura post excercise, sometimes during - for me I think staying hydrated is key, often easy to forget to drink when cycling. I'm lucky I don't get headaches though, so can cycle through it if necessary.<br><br>
NTA after a layoff you need to ease yourself back into it. That sounded way too intense! Really hope you get the head aches sorted, sounds like a nightmare. -
<p>The sensation last night was from the neck all the way up the right side of my head, which means first I want to get the shoulder etc checked out - might be referred pain. It was tense, not painful. And annoying.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>But I'll look into the medication. Nothing so far has been strong enough for the migraines, and the vision loss doesn't usually have pain following it.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Hydration and taking it easy in the meantime. I bought an inflatable two-seater kayak for a bit of fun so will head up the river tomorrow with the kids for some water sport and a picnic.</p> -
Your vision thing sounds like scintillating scotoma. Google the Wikipedia page - there are a few images on it that replicate what it "looks" like.<br><br>
I occasionally experience it after exercise. Just the vision problem, not a full blown migraine. <br><br>
First few times I got it I thought I had blown a blood vessel in my brain or something. Quite scary.<br><br>
I normally think sports drinks are the devils's piss drunk by wanabees (or really serious athletes), but have found two actual uses for them. One being I suck down one when seeing that aura and it seems to clear up more quickly. -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="dingo" data-cid="550455" data-time="1451880306">
<div>
<p>Your vision thing sounds like scintillating scotoma. Google the Wikipedia page - there are a few images on it that replicate what it "looks" like.<br><br>
I occasionally experience it after exercise. Just the vision problem, not a full blown migraine.</p>
</div>
</blockquote>
<p> </p>
<p>Just googled that and wow that looks familiar.</p> -
Wow that is exactly what I get. Those images are bang on the money. Usually just the vision thing with no headache - often after exercise. Fingers crossed - I'm much more careful about hydrating eg when cycling, so haven't had a post exercise one for about month or so.
-
<p>I'm thinking you guys all signed up to a LSD trial at some point!!</p>
-
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="Paekakboyz" data-cid="551773" data-time="1452475373">
<div>
<p>I'm thinking you guys all signed up to a LSD trial at some point!!</p>
</div>
</blockquote>
<p>Sadly no! </p>
<p> </p>
<p>Its more boring than that. A <span>scintillating scotoma is related to migraines, even without the headache. Getting migraines is normally genetic and inherited. My father got them for example. I don't the headache but get the </span><span style="color:rgb(40,40,40);font-family:helvetica, arial, sans-serif;">scintillating scotoma which can have similar causes as a migraine which are often diet related. For example, a known cause is changing both your diet and increasing exercise intensity at the same time - the sort of thing many people do. </span></p>
<p> </p>
<p><span style="color:rgb(40,40,40);font-family:helvetica, arial, sans-serif;">I find </span><span style="color:rgb(40,40,40);font-family:helvetica, arial, sans-serif;">scintillating scotoma don't tend to hit me </span><span>a weights day. I tend to get them on a cardio day particularly after a month or two of higher intensity coupled with a "good" diet where I'm both visibly losing fat (look in a mirror at ab definition) and actually losing it (measure waistline). This suggests my body is under stress and when I hit the cardio that day, I might have been dehydrated and/or have slightly lower blood sugar than normal.</span></p>
<p> </p>
<p>That's what cause it for me. Some people will be similar, other people will have other triggers.</p> -
Yep - everyone is different. For me I think it's any of hydration, blood sugar, caffeine, stress. Making sure I have enough carbs, water, salt etc while eg cycling has really helped. When overloaded at work easy to forget to eat and drink properly, have too much coffee, get stressed so that's a perfect storm. <br><br>
Had to give a big presentation with one recently. Not my idea of fun.<br><br>
I used to feel really wiped out after them, even the next day - woolly headed, disoriented etc. Don't get that so much now - fingers crossed it stays that way. Both my kids get them - headaches, vomiting the full works. Not proud to have passed that one on, poor buggers. -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="dingo" data-cid="550455" data-time="1451880306">
<div>
<p>I normally think sports drinks are the devils's piss drunk by wanabees (or really serious athletes), but have found two actual uses for them. One being I suck down one when seeing that aura and it seems to clear up more quickly.</p>
</div>
</blockquote>
<p> </p>
<p>After giving birth to TR Jnr, Mrs TR was getting epidural headaches, which she said are worse than any migraine or headache she has ever had, and the nurses suggested she drink V or Red Bull to help ease them (due being limited as to what drugs they could use) which it did, but obviously has a side effect for TR Jnr... :morning:</p> -
The description of the scintillating scotoma doesn't sound quite like what I'm getting - the "color" or blurriness isn't there, I just get blackness. But I see the relationship as I don't get headache either, unlike with my migraines.<br><br>
Donated plasma on the weekend, and the blood bank scales said 105 but I was loaded up on for and fluids. Massive sugar hangover yesterday as I cut the rubbish out. Better today, as I adjust the diet and up the fluids in preparation fit light exercise later in the week. <br><br>
Still over 101 this morning but doing some isometric stuff in preparation for resuming karate this term and working towards the purple belt. Kata are good to relax mind and body, as well as re-tension some of the rarely used muscles. -
Saw the chiropractor yesterday and there was some shit going on with my neck that was fucking up my jaw and skull in general. Feeling wasted today - usually happens after the neck work, and she said it'll be a couple of weeks before I'm back to normal.<br><br>
In the mean time, I'll get walking again before running in a couple of weeks.